YOUR RAZORBACK SHIRT MIGHT BE OUTDATED IN THE COMING MONTHS THE UNIVERSITY SAYS IT WILL CHANGE THE OFFICIAL "RAZORBACK RED" ON ALL LICENSED PRODUCTS. 40/29'S BEN WAGNER IS LIVE IN FAYETTEVILLE TO EXPLAIN THE SWITCH. IT'S ONLY GOING TO AFFECT APPAREL YOU CAN BUY ALL OF THE TEAM'S UNIFORMS ARE ALREADY THE CORRECT NEW COLOR. YOU CAN SEE THE DIFFERENCE HERE INSIDE BIG RED'S THIS IS THE OLDER - BRIGHT RED THAT USED TO BE THE OFFICIAL COLOR. NOW - ALL LICENSED GEAR WILL SWITCH TO THE DARKER RED. "Dark red, medium dark red, independence red" IN THE GRAND COLOR SCHEME "Cardinal and scarlet" A SHADE OF RED DARKER DOESN'T SEEM LIKE ALL THAT MUCH RIGHT? "The shade, the tone of the cardinal is what's been slightly tweaked for our licensed product." CANDACE STIMMEL HEADS THE UNIVERSITY'S LICENSING DEPARTMENT AND IS IN CHARGE OF THE COLOR SWAP. THE OFFICIAL RED USED TO BE PANTONE 200 IT'S A COLOR MATCH - SIMILAR TO THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA'S COLOR RED. NOW - LICENSED PRODUCTS WILL BE PANTONE 201 - A LOT LIKE ALABAMA'S RED (NATS - FOOTBALL) A COLOR YOU'VE SEEN FOR YEARS ON THE FIELD. "Even back in the early beginnings of our athletic program this has been the prominent color - the cardinal color." THE UNIVERSITY SAYS IT'S AN EFFORT TO KEEP ALL PRODUCTS THE SAME COLOR AS CURRENT ARKANSAS UNIFORMS. BUT DAVID ODELL AT BIG RED'S ISN'T SURE ANYONE WILL EVEN NOTICE. "If you order a lot of shirts from a company and you look at them real close, you can see where they had different dye lots. They will be slightly different. But usually no one notices, no one cares." THIS WON'T COST THE UNIVERSITY ANY MONEY SINCE THEY AREN'T CHANGING THE JERSEYS. THOUGH MANUFACTURERS WILL HAVE TO SELL OFF ALL OF THEIR OLD, BRIGHTER RED BY THE END OF AUGUST. REPORTING LIVE IN FAYETTEVILLE, BEN WAGNER, 40/29 NEWS. THE UNIVERSITY SAYS IT SPENT SOME NINE MONTHS DECIDING ON THE COLOR CHANGE. IT AFFECTS MORE THAN 550 COMPANIES WHO MAKE LICENSED ARKANSAS

Hillary Clinton did not have a State Department email account while she served as America's top diplomat, a senior state department official said Monday, and instead used a personal email account during her four years on the job.